James had done as he said, locking himself up in the house. He'd closed the gates at the street, closed and locked both the front and the rear doors, and had spent his time sitting on the lone mattress in the Master Suite with his guitar. He went back and forth between trying to play, trying to polish up older songs, and just laying in complete
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"I don't know," he muttered, trying to move his mouth away from the puddle of bile surrounding his face. He coughed and tried to catch his breath, but his heart was pounding too hard inside of his chest. With its increased palpitations, his body shook and shivered and his eyes squeezed shut as the pain seared into his stomach. "I don't know where the bedroom is," he managed to groan, coughing again.
His eyes felt heavy, his body lethargic. He tried to pick his head up and after lifting it an inch, it fell back down and his forehead hit the floor. His arms went limp underneath him, his breath streaming in and out of his mouth like a mad wind. He coughed again, almost panting, trying to keep himself from vomiting any more of the fluid his body didn't have. Between not sleeping, barely eating, and drinking alcohol, he'd driven his body to the point of absolute exhaustion and dehydration. He couldn't seem to move.
"The bedroom," he slurred, almost in a dream-like voice. "The bedroom .." he repeated, his body trembling, his mouth dry.
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Letting his arm down, Jen moved him the best she could away from the bile on the floor and into the recovery position, it was all she could do, she wasn't even strong enough to move him on her own. Sliding her jacket off and put it over him the best she could, fear rushing through her veins as her mind tried to tell her body what she needed to do. But she felt helpless.
Pulling her cell from her pocket she sent a text to Jeff, hoping to god that he was on his want to see James.
Fluids, she needed to get fluids into him...
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His eyes were half-lidded and empty, the deep, black wells underneath his eyes worse than they had been before. His skin looked dry, almost too old for his age. His head lolled lazily, resting against the floorboards. He started muttering more gibberish, this time telling his father something about a test he hadn't, he swore, cheated on. Random sounds and what were attempts at words kept coming from his mouth until they finally grew quiet, spaced out more and more. His eyes went from being half-lidded to closed completely, his body still shaking with the erratic beating of his heart.
"I'm sorry," he mumbled, almost silently, before his body went limp and things went black.
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There was one thing she'd always been teased about when she went on an off world mission to help others, and that was the amount of medical supplies she carried with her, and back here on Earth it wasn't any different. Even before she'd started working with the SGC, Jennifer had carried a bag of medical supplies with her, and this trip wasn't any different. "Help me into the house with my bags," she told the driver, and when he gave her a look she threw $20 dollars extra at him through the window and he soon moved. Once her bags were in the doorway she shooed the man off and started her frantic search around the house.
Sheet, blanket, wire coat hanger, ice - thank god for built in ice machines. Bowl of water, a flannel and a cloth. Okay, she could do this.
The floor would be too cold for him and as she couldn't lift him up onto the sofa, she pulled the seat cushions off of it, brought the pillows from the bedroom and laid them out on the floor. Carefully she rolled him onto the sheet, wrapped it around him and with a little effort, she pulled him up onto the cushions. Now he was off the floor. Tossing the blanket over him she dragged a chair over from the table and left it next to his arm, back facing him. Bending out the coat hanger she made a make shift hook which she looped over the chair. Then came her bag of medical supplies. Inside was pouches of saline and she attached one to the hook over the back of the chair ready. Then came the needle, straight into the vein on his arm to which she attached the tube to the saline pouch. That was to combat his dehydration.
She checked his temperature and then his pulse once more.
There were things she needed to do, emails to write, flights to cancel and phone calls she needed to make. Right now all she could do was sit and wait for him to wake up. Jennifer knew that he needed medical attention, and while a hospital was a good place for him, she really was one of the best doctors out there.
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